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by eesmith 1113 days ago
My main concern is to show that "Birth control is also rooted in eugenics" is false.

I think I have done that.

Eugenics requires birth control, but there's a long history of birth control for family planning reasons which predates eugenics. Because sex is fun, while having another screaming baby might not be so fun.

I do not think your understanding comes from a solid reading of history. I think your primary source contains dubious scholarship, which you accept with too much trust.

In addition to my earlier comment, the Calhoun misquote you just now gave also comes from 'An Underground History Of American Education' by John Taylor Gatto. https://archive.org/details/AnUndergroundHistoryOfAmericanEd...

1) Just by reading the quote, it's suspicious because how does someone from 1901 use the term "mass media", which wasn't coined until 1923? https://www.etymonline.com/word/mass-media#etymonline_v_5420... .

Here is Ross's 1901 book "Social Control", https://archive.org/details/socialcontrolas04rossgoog/page/n... (it's a collection of a series of articles he previous published, also under the name 'Social Control').

It does not use the terms "media", and uses the term "medium" only twice, neither referring to communications media.

2) The only place I can find the quote "church with propaganda, education, and mass media" is from Gatto's book. The few other sources which mention it, including "The Atlantean Conspiracy" (described as "the ultimate encyclopedia exposing the global conspiracy from Atlantis to Zion") pretend to quote the original source but are actually quoting Gatto.

We know this because a) the quote is identical, b) it includes 'mass media', which doesn't exist in Ross, and c) the only place Ross uses 'propaganda' is "Dr. Holmes, a delicate humorist, seemed born to preach the propaganda of the clean shirt" at https://archive.org/details/socialcontrolas04rossgoog/page/n...

3) Further, "plastic lumps of human dough" is a misquote. The actual text from Ross is:

> The schooling of the young is a long-headed device to promote order, and does not get adopted till the group wakes up. At first it is the rare thinker who sees anything in it, and his arguments do not always prevail. Down to the Reformation, only the Greek philosophers and the Jewish rabbis had set forth the possibilities of education in respect to social order. Men trust the policeman and the priest sooner than the pedagogue. To collect little plastic lumps of human dough from private households and shape them on the social kneading-board, exhibits a faith in the power of suggestion which few peoples ever attain to. And so it happens that the rôle of the schoolmaster in the social economy is just beginning. The technique of belief and religion has been understood for thousands of years; but the technique of education is the discovery of yesterday— or, shall I say, to-morrow?

This quote is now a simile, not a metaphor, and it refers to the young, not "people".

Anyone using "People are only little plastic lumps" are copying from Gatto's misquote, and not using Ross's original work.

> From what I’ve studied about the time period

What you've studied appears to one book containing many errors, and publications by the Catholic Church.

You are absolutely correctly that eugenics was a mainstream component of educated, white, well-off progressive thought in the late 1800s and early 1900s, and nearly all of them white supremacists and firm believers in male patriarchy.

That does not mean everything from that time period came from "the same mindset", as you claim without any evidence.

Birth control is a tool. The mindset comes in how you use the tool.

One mindset says it should not be used at all. That is your mindset.

Another mindset says it should be voluntary, for example, as part of family planning by informed adults. That is my mindset.

A third says it should be involuntarily - the state should mandate birth control and use it to weed out certain characteristics. That is the mindset of the negative eugenicism that Sanger was opposed to.

You can believe the latter two are the same mindset, but you don't have the evidence. Well, in a way they are, if the mindset is "don't follow the teaching of the Catholic Church".

> compulsory education

In the US, compulsory education started in Massachusetts during the colonial era. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Massachusetts_School_Laws , made a universal requirement in the state by 1852.

You mean, I suspect, national compulsory education.

There are enough lies and mistruths about the history of the US education system that I don't want to wade into that muck.

> that is because our modern world has organized itself around hedonism instead of loving God

Hahahahah! And Satan sits on the throne in Rome, spreading lies as the anti-pope.

And the halls of Shinto temples are full of hedonism.

I am an atheist. The Catholic Church is a male supremacist organization, and I am a feminist. I have no interest in understanding the haberdashery behind the Emperor's new clothes that don't even exist.

Besides the poor scholarship in Gatto's citations, another problem in depending on Gatto as your main source is that Gatto has blind spots. Take:

> In 30 years of teaching kids rich and poor I almost never met a learning disabled child; hardly ever met a gifted and talented one either. Like all school categories, these are sacred myths, created by human imagination. They derive from questionable values we never examine because they preserve the temple of schooling.

IMO, that's cherry picking the conclusion that there is a 'temple of schooling.' I believe "gifted" set up to give better schooling to middle-class white students at a time education was forced to be integrated. For example, at the time Gatto was teaching, and quoting https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/pdf/10.1080/00220620.2022.20... :

] The implementation of gifted programmes in the 1970s provided a way for school divisions to circumvent many of the aims of desegregated schooling as called for in Brown v. Board of Education. This study examines the implementation of one such system in a Southern school district that saw schools close rather than integrate in the years preceding the founding of a segregated gifted programme known as Quest. Additionally, the study situates the founding of this gifted programme in a national social and legal context involving fears of educational stagnation and white flight from public school systems. Using primary and secondary sources, this study highlights the attitudes of national policymakers at work in the 1974 reauthorization of ESEA, which significantly limited school divisions abilities to integrate while also providing funds for gifted classrooms that segregated ‘exceptional’ children using racially and socioeconomically biased measures.

The idea of the white race is indeed a myth, and one which needs to die. And it's also a myth concerning social control - the myth that whites need to be in charge! But Gatto doesn't see it.

Now I'm going back to my hedonistic lifestyle of re-implementing 40 year old code.

1 comments

Good luck on your code!

I do appreciate your research and willingness to have a conversation.

I think to some degree you yourself are cherry picking isolated data points and taking them out of context to support your point. It’s a straightforward approach to rhetorically defend your perspective and of course I’m guilty of doing the same thing.

The only reason I’m bringing it up is just to say: history happens in a context. Ideas don’t come out of a vacuum. It’s really important not to take something like “birth control” (or “atheism” for that matter) at face value without trying to understand the genesis of those concepts in society and the motivations of the people who made them a standard part of the modern world.

I really do appreciate your corrections and I don’t want to be presenting misinformation. Obviously that just discredits any points I would try to make.

I didn’t present a very solid case that “birth control is rooted in eugenics” and you had fair rebuttals for the points that I made. Granted, even if I personally lack the ability to make the argument clearly that doesn’t mean that it’s not true. But I understand that you don’t have any reason to think it’s true and that’s ok.

I would say that there is a fourth mindset to add to your taxonomy which is: not to mandate birth control but to attempt to achieve the same goal by dishonestly manipulating people into choosing to use birth control who would not otherwise have used it. This is what I believe has happened on a mass scale.

I used to be an atheist too! I grew up with people that are still atheists.

I also grew up in a relatively anti-Christian environment and picked up a lot of negative assumptions about Christianity that in hindsight don’t make much sense.

My experience of being an atheist is that it was the most dogmatic and intellectually dishonest view of the world I have encountered. What I mean by that is that there is a dogmatic “orthodoxy” you are required to believe that makes numerous truth claims about reality (and morality) without sufficient evidence.

Ironically it always ultimately falls back on social proof instead of empiricism (i.e. “well no one else thinks that” or ad hominem attacks) and members are not permitted to ask reasonable questions that do not support atheist dogma.

It was a horrible, oppressive and depressing way to understand myself and the world around me.

Now, despite making extraordinary claims about reality and God’s intervention in the world the Catholic church is actually the most intellectually honest culture that I have ever been a part of (and there are literally thousands of years of sincere, good hearted and intellectually honest geniuses you can learn from).

Catholicism is not the same as any Protestant christianity you might have encountered. The Protestant reformation and the “Enlightenment” both split from the Church at around the same time and each rejected 3 basic claims about reality that the Catholic church holds to be true (this is why Protestant christianity and atheism both have to rely on assertions of dogma to maintain their views):

1. Man is an intelligent and morally accountable agent

2. The world around us is fundamentally intelligible (because we are intelligent)

3. Everything in the world has a “telos” meaning a purpose that it is directed towards.

This might seem irrelevant to your life but if you want to be self-aware and moral about your behavior and beliefs this kind of stuff becomes essential. I guarantee that “thinking what most people believe is true” is not actually an effective compass in that regard.

I wish you all the best and I hope you apply your willingness to seek the truth in a consistent manner!

> My experience of being an atheist is that it was the most dogmatic and intellectually dishonest view of the world I have encountered.

Well bless your heart. You've already implied I'm degenerate, and now you're implying I'm dogmatic and immoral.

Lol, I’m sure you’re a nice person! Not trying to attack or disparage you personally in any way.

Just trying (poorly) to share the things I wish someone had told me 20 years ago. My personal experience has been that there are a set of confusing belief systems in this world that many people are victims of. These beliefs are logically inconsistent, they cause a lot of real personal suffering, and they are intellectually challenging to disentangle oneself from.

My understanding of reality is that God created your soul out of nothing and He loves you so much that He would be willing to suffer and die horribly even if it meant redeeming and reconciling solely your one soul to Him.

You have free will and the freedom to believe anything you want. There are different roads to God and diligence about the truth (which you seem to have) is one of them.

God bless you and thanks for the conversation!